Trivia’s Facts and More (10/26)

Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

This informative post will be published on Saturday in place of my regular one.  You are invited to participate with the opening question.

Brain Teaser Question

What is so fragile that saying its name breaks it?

(answer found at the end of this post)

Featured Facts

Being one of the original thirteen English colonies, the state of North Carolina is admitted as the 12th one to the American union on November 21, 1789.

Here are a few quick facts about North Carolina:

  • Capital city:  Raleigh
  • Most populous city:  Charlotte (874,579, based on 2020 census)
  • Bird:  cardinal
  • Flower:  flowering dogwood
  • Motto:  Esse Quam Videri (To Be, Rather Than To Seem)

North Carolina’s nickname of the Tar Heel State refers to its history of ship building.  From the state’s abundant pine forests, a variety of naval stores are extracted from these trees.  These include tar, pitch, and turpentine.

The state’s landscape features three major physiographic regions.  The physical geology includes the Coastal Plain (also called the tidewater), the Piedmont (low, rolling plateau), and the Blue Ridge (Appalachian Mountains).  

Located along the Atlantic coastline, Kitty Hawk is famously remembered as the site of the Wright brothers’ first of  its kind successful airplane flight.  One of the state’s license plate designs features the words, “First in Flight.” 

In 1587, Roanoke Island becomes the first English colony in North America.  The settlement is twenty years ahead of the founding of the Jamestown colony in 1607.  Later, the inhabitants mysteriously disappear.  

The communities of Winston and Salem originally sit about one mile apart.  In 1913, they merge together and become Winston-Salem.  The city claims to be the birthplace of Krispy Kreme donuts when the very first business opens in 1937 to sell them.

North Carolina produces nearly sixty percent of the sweet potato crop in the United States.  The tallest brick lighthouse in the United States is the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse, which stands 210 feet tall after being rebuilt in 1870.

from top left and moving clockwise:  wright brothers making history at kitty hawk, cape hatteras lighthouse, sweet potato crop, flowering dogwood, and state capitol in raleigh.   (Images courtesy of Pinterest)

 

Answer to Brain Teaser Question

Silence

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